COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL
DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
(MR
MESHER)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE
SCOTT BAKER
____________________
| EUGEN HERMAN HOCKENJOS |
Appellant | |
| - v - |
||
| SECRETARY OF STATE FOR SOCIAL
SECURITY |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Nicholas Paines Q.C and Ms C Patry (instructed by Solicitor,
Department for Work and Pensions) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 19, 20
May 2004
and 9 December 2004
____________________
LORD JUSTICE SCOTT BAKER:
Introduction
"1. The children Heidi Maria Hockenjos and Alisha Jade Ellen Hockenjos shall reside with the mother Caroline Hockenjos and the father Eugen Hockenjos.
2. The children shall reside with the mother at the following times:
During school term times
Heidi: Thursday – Monday
Alisha: Wednesday – Monday
3. The children shall reside with the father at the following times:
During school term times
Heidi: Monday – Thursday
Alisha: Monday – Wednesday
4. Every fourth week the days shall be changed so that Heidi resides with her father from Sunday at 11 am until Wednesday, and Alisha resides with her father from Sunday at 11am until Tuesday. In this respect responsibility for transportation of the children shall be divided between the parents equally.
5. All of the school holidays shall be divided between the parents equally."
"A statistical discrimination in favour of women in respect of the working of the rule of entitlement to child additions to income-based JSA. The Secretary of State therefore does not challenge the statistics in the report and seeks to defend the case on the grounds of objective justification alone."
The Directive
"The principle of equal treatment means that there shall be no discrimination whatsoever on ground of sex either directly, or indirectly by reference in particular to marital or family status, in particular as concerns:
- the scope of the schemes and the conditions of access thereto;
- the obligation to contribute and the calculation of contributions;
- the calculation of benefits including increases due in respect of a spouse and for dependants and the conditions governing the duration and retention of entitlement to benefits.
And 4.2
"The principle of equal treatment shall be without prejudice to the provisions relating to the protection of women on the grounds of maternity."
"Article 1
The purpose of this Directive is the progressive implementation, in the field of social security and other elements of social protection provided for in Article 3, of the principle of equal treatment for men and women in matters of social security, hereinafter referred to as "the principle of equal treatment".
Article 2
This Directive shall apply to the working population – including self-employed persons, workers and self-employed persons whose activity is interrupted by illness, accident or involuntary unemployment and persons seeking employment – and to retired or invalid workers and self-employed persons.
Article 3.1
This Directive shall apply to:
(a) statutory schemes which provide protection against the following risks;
- sickness,
- invalidity,
- old age,
- accidents at work and occupational diseases,
- unemployment;
(b) social assistance, in so far as it is intended to supplement or replace the schemes referred to in (a)."
It is unnecessary to recite paragraphs 2 and 3 of this Article.
The domestic legislation
"An allowance, to be known as a jobseeker's allowance, shall be payable in accordance with the provisions of this Act."
Section 1(2) sets out the criteria for entitlement e.g. that the claimant is available for employment, is actively seeking work, not receiving education and is under pensionable age.
By section 1(3) JSA is payable in respect of a week. Section 1(4) defines income-based JSA as a JSA entitlement to which is based on the claimant satisfying conditions which include those set out in section 3.
Section 3(1) requires that the claimant:
"(a) has an income which does not exceed the applicable amount (determined in accordance with the regulations under section 4) or has no income;
(b) is not entitled to income support;
(c) is not a member of a family one of whose members is entitled to income support;
(d) is not a member of a family one of whose members is entitled to an income-based jobseeker's allowance;
(e) is not a member of a married or unmarried couple the other member of which is engaged in remunerative work; and
(f) is a person -
(i) who has reached the age of 18; or
(ii) in respect of whom a direction under section 16 is in force; or
(iii) who has, in prescribed circumstances to be taken into account for a prescribed period, reached the age of 16 but not the age of 18."
Section 3(2) provides that:
"Regulations may provide for one or both of the following conditions to be included in the income-based conditions, in the case of a person to whom subsection (1)(f)(ii) or (iii) applies –
(a) a condition that the claimant must register for employment;
(b) a condition that the claimant must register for training."
Section 4 sets out the basis for calculating the amount payable by JSA with the detail to be provided by regulations. Sections 6 to 12, 14 and 16 to 25 are concerned with the conditions relevant to the entitlement to JSA.
Regulation 77 sets out the circumstances in which a person is to be treated as responsible or not responsible for another. It provides:
"(1) Subject to the following provisions of this regulation, a person is to be treated for the purposes of the Act as responsible for a child or young person for whom he is receiving child benefit….
(2) In a case where a child ("the first child") is in receipt of child benefit in respect of another child ("the second child"), the person treated as responsible for the first child in accordance with the provisions of this regulation shall also be treated as responsible for the second child.
(3) In the case of a child or young person in respect of whom no person is receiving child benefit, the person who shall be treated as responsible for that child or young person shall be –
(a) except where sub-paragraph (b) applies, the person with whom the child or young person usually lives; or
(b) where only one claim for child benefit has been made in respect of a child or young person, the person who made that claim.
(4) Where regulation 78(7) (circumstances in which a person is to be treated as being or not being a member of the household) applies in respect of a child or young person, that child or young person shall be treated as the responsibility of the claimant for that part of the week for which he is under that regulation treated as being a member of the claimant's household.
(5) Except where paragraph (4) applies, a child or young person shall be treated as the responsibility of only one person in any benefit week and any person other than the one treated as responsible for the child or young person under this regulation shall be treated as not so responsible."
Regulation 78(7) applies to children who are looked after by local authorities or who are in custody, and are only allowed home for some days in each week. Those are the only circumstances in which responsibility can exist for less than a complete benefit week. I shall return briefly to regulation 78(7) later.
"A person who is responsible for one or more children in any week shall be entitled, subject to the provisions of this part of this Act, to a benefit (to be known as "child benefit") for that week in respect of the child or each of the children for whom he is responsible."
"(1) Subject to sub-paragraph (2) below, as between a person claiming child benefit in respect of a child for any week and a person to whom child benefit in respect of that child for that week has already been awarded when the claim is made, the latter shall be entitled.
(2) Sub-paragraph (1) above shall not confer any priority where the week to which the claim relates is later than the third week following that in which the claim is made."
Under paragraph 2 a person qualifying by virtue of the "living with" test under section 141(1)(a) has priority over a person qualifying under the "contributing to the cost" test under section 143(1)(b).
Under paragraph 3, subject to paragraphs 1 and 2, where the husband and wife are living together the wife is entitled. Under paragraph 4, subject to paragraphs 1,2 and 3 a parent of the child is entitled as against a non-parent and, subject to that, as between two persons residing together who are parents of the child but not husband and wife, the mother is entitled. Finally, under paragraph 5, as between persons not falling within paragraphs 1 to 4 they can jointly elect who is entitled or, in default of election, it is whoever the Secretary of State in his discretion determines.
Justification
Mr Sprawson's evidence in my view adds little or no contribution to the resolution of the issues in the present case. Apart from a helpful section in which he refers to child benefit as a passport to other benefit entitlements, his statement deals with the operation of child benefit in particular in relation to Mr Barber's case.
Neither Mr Binns or Mr Sprawson tackles the important question of justifying the link between JSA and child benefit in relation to discrimination that contravenes Article 4 of the Directive.
"As the court has consistently held, Article 4(1) of the Directive precludes the application of a national measure which, although formulated in neutral terms, works to the disadvantage of far more women than men, unless that measure is based on objective factors unrelated to any discrimination on grounds of sex. That is the case where the measures chosen reflect a legitimate social policy aim of the Member State whose legislation is at issue, are appropriate to achieve that aim and are necessary in order to do so (De Weerd, née Roks and others, C-343/92 [1994] ECR 1-571, paragraphs 33 and 34)."
It continued:
"33. The court observes that, in the current state of Community law, social policy is a matter for the Member States (see Commission v Belgium, C-229/89 [1991] ECR 1-2205, paragraph 22). Consequently, it is for the Member States to choose the measures capable of achieving the aim of their social and employment policy. In exercising that competence, the Member States have a broad margin of discretion.
34. It should be noted that the social and employment policy aim relied on by the German government is objectively unrelated to any discrimination on grounds of sex and that, in exercising its competence, the national legislature was reasonably entitled to consider that the legislation in question was necessary in order to achieve that aim".
"66. By its fifth question the national court seeks to ascertain the legal criteria for establishing the objective justification, for the purposes of indirect discrimination under Article 119 of the Treaty, of a measure adopted by a Member State in pursuance of its social policy.
67. In that respect, the first point to note is that it is ultimately for the national court, which has sole jurisdiction to assess the facts and interpret the national legislation, to determine whether and to what extent a legislative provision, which, though applying independently of the sex of the worker, actually affects a considerable higher percentage of women than men, is justified by objective reasons unrelated to any discrimination on grounds of sex (Case 171/88 Rinner-Kühn [1989] ECR 2743, paragraph 15)."
The Court continued:
"69 It is settled case-law that if a Member State is able to show that the measures chosen reflect a necessary aim of its social policy and are suitable and necessary for achieving that aim, the mere fact that the legislative provision affects far more women than men at work cannot be regarded as a breach of Article 119 of the Treaty (see, in particular, Case C-444/93 Megner and Scheffel v Innungskrankenkasse Vorderpfalz [1995] ECR 1-4741, paragraph 24, and Freers and Speckmann, cited above, paragraph 28).
70 In this case the United Kingdom Government contends that the risk that the exposure of employers to proceedings for unfair dismissal brought by employees who had only fairly recently been engaged is a deterrent to recruitment, so that extension of the qualifying period for protection against dismissal will stimulate recruitment.
71 It cannot be disputed that the encouragement of recruitment constitutes a legitimate aim of social policy.
72 It must also be ascertained, in the light of all the relevant factors and taking into account the possibility of achieving the social policy aim in question by other means, whether such a aim appears to be unrelated to any discrimination based on sex and whether the disputed rule, as a means to its achievement, is capable of advancing that aim.
73 In that connection, the United Kingdom Government maintains that a Member State should merely have to show that it was reasonably entitled to consider that the measure would advance the social policy aim. It relies to that end on Case C-317/93 Nolte [1995] ECR 1-4625.
74 It is true that in paragraph 33 of Nolte case the court observed that, in choosing the measures capable of achieving the aims of social and employment policy, the Member States have a broad margin of discretion.
75 However, although social policy is essentially a matter for the Member States under Community law as it stands, the fact remains that the broad margin of discretion available to the Member States in that connection cannot have the effect of frustrating the implementation of a fundamental principle of Community law such as that of equal pay for men and women.
76 Mere generalisations concerning the capacity of a specific measure to encourage recruitment are not enough to show that the aim of the disputed rule is unrelated to any discrimination based on sex nor to provide evidence on the basis of which it could reasonably be considered that the means chosen were suitable for achieving that aim."
"The burden placed on the government in this type of case is not as heavy as previously thought. Governments must be able to govern. They adopt general policies, and implement measures to carry out their policies. Governments must be able to take into account a wide range of social, economic and political factors. The Court of Justice has recognised these practical considerations. If their aim is legitimate, governments have a discretion when choosing the method to achieve their aim. National courts, acting with hindsight, are not to impose an impracticable burden on governments which are proceeding in good faith. Generalised assumptions, lacking any factual foundation, are not good enough. But governments are to be afforded a broad measure of discretion. The onus is on the Member State to show (1) that the allegedly discriminatory rule reflects a legitimate aim of its social policy, (2) that this aim is unrelated to any discrimination based on sex, and (3) that the Member State could reasonably consider that the means chosen were suitable for attaining that aim."
In the concluding words of this paragraph Lord Nicholls is doing no more than reciting the answer by the European Court in paragraph 77 to the fifth question asked of it.
"As Community law stands at present, social policy is a matter for the Member States, which enjoy a reasonable margin of discretion as regards the nature of social protection measures and the detailed arrangements for their implementation (Case C-229/89 Commission v Belgium [1991] ECR 1-2205, paragraph 22, and C-226/91 Molenbroek [1992] ECR 1-5943, paragraph 15). If they meet a legitimate aim of social policy, are suitable and requisite for attaining that end and are therefore justified by reasons unrelated to discrimination on grounds of sex, such measures cannot be regarded as being contrary to the principle of equal treatment (Commission v Belgium, cited above, paragraphs 19 and 26, and Molenbroek cited above, paragraphs 13 and 19)."
"It should, however, be stated that those considerations, in so far as they are only generalisations about certain categories of workers, do not enable criteria which are both objective and unrelated to any discrimination on grounds of sex to be identified. However, if the Member State can show that the means chosen meet a necessary aim of its social policy and that they are suitable and requisite for attaining that aim, the mere fact the provision affects a much greater number of female workers than male workers cannot be regarded as constituting an infringement of Article 119."
Mr Drabble Q.C, who has appeared before us for the appellant as he did before the Commissioner, rejects this approach.
"The aim is one of establishing a fair and efficient distribution of the public funds available to maintain children within the confines of a subsistence benefit such as JSA."
"However, we recognise that patterns of care may be changing. That is the reason for the amendments. Many more families share responsibility for children than was previously the case, especially where a family has split up - resulting in both parents sharing responsibility for the children from the former relationship. The increase in shared responsibilities between families raises the question whether, in future, direct support to one family will continue to be the right approach. We are determined to keep the provision of government support in such cases under review, in order to ensure that we meet the needs of the children involved.
We have no intention, however, of making any hasty or ill considered changes to our present approach. The question of shared responsibility for children goes wider than tax credits and affects other systems of support that recognise the needs of families of children such as housing benefit. Even if, in the light of the changing climate on this issue, we became persuaded that a change in approach was warranted, such a change could not be made overnight."
"Against that background, we see the need to make some protective changes to the Bill to equip us to change the way we deal with shared care cases – if it became apparent that a different approach was more appropriate. To provide us with that flexibility, Lords amendment number 14 would allow us to vary the amount of the individual element in the child tax credit to reflect any relevant factors, such as shared responsibility for a child. That mirrors a similar power already present in the family element.
Lords amendment number 15 would enable us, where more than one claim is received for a particular child or children, to pay each family a reduced amount of any element payable in respect of any particular child – to reflect the level of care that the family provides. If we decided, in the future, to recognise the claim for a child by more than one household at any one time, we would not want those households to be in a better position in terms of tax credits than a family who had stayed together throughout and was solely responsible for a child."
And a little later:
"However, the key factor in making the amendments is to make clear in the Bill that, if, in future, tax credits have to reflect shared care responsibility, entitlement can be divided and not duplicated."
She than concluded:
"For example, we might wish to confine access to child credit to those who care for a child for at least three or four days a week, or, looking at the matter more broadly, for about 40% of the time on a regular basis. The powers that we have taken would enable such matters to be covered in secondary legislation, which can be fine tuned more readily if necessary, following detailed considerations and consultation."
The commissioner's view
"Taking into account the nature and structure of income-based JSA as described above, I consider that the test for responsibility for a child in Regulation 77(1) of the JSA Regulations, in terms of receipt of child benefit, is not a suitable or necessary means of achieving the social policy aim put forward by the Secretary of State. The test does not adequately identify the person who is responsible for the child or young person in question, or even the person who bears the greater proportion of the responsibility."
"In so far as the effect of regulation 77(5) is to prevent two different people from being treated as responsible for a child for the same benefit period (whether that is a week or a day), there is a link to the discriminatory rule tying responsibility exclusively to receipt of child benefit. However, it seems to me that that effect is amply justified by the principle that the same need should not be met twice by the same benefit. In so far as the effect of regulation 77(5) is that responsibility for a child must (except in particular limited cases) be attributed for the whole of each benefit week, in my judgment that effect has not been shown to be discriminatory on the ground of sex. Once the discriminatory link to child benefit is removed it seems to me that the rule is neutral in its effect. If it was not, I would be inclined to say that it was within the broad margin of discretion available to Member States to say whether a benefit, or some element of it, could be paid to any particular person on a part– week basis or only on a whole-week basis."
The extent to which regulation 77 is discriminatory and unjustified.
Remedy
"In summary, my decision on the law is that regulation 77(1), (2) and (3)(b) of the JSA Regulations is not to be applied to any persons within the personal scope of Directive 79/7, with the result that the question of whether the claimant is to be treated as responsible for Heidi and Alisha is to be determined by applying Regulation 77(3)(a) and (5). That involves applying the test of with whom the child usually lives. I hold, by analogy with what was held in decision CFC 1537/1995 about the test of with whom a child normally lives, that the question is not to be judged by looking at the position within each benefit week, but by looking at what is usual by reference to a longer period. Since I have held that, by virtue of Regulation 77(5), only one person may be treated as responsible for a child or young person in each benefit week, the test in Regulation 77(3)(a) must be applied so as to resolve any conflict between those competing to be treated as responsible."
Mr Paines is content with this remedy on the basis of the commissioner's decisions on the substance of the case. But in my view other parts of regulation 77 are discriminatory and cannot be applied, including regulation 77(5); the whole of the link with child benefit is objectionable.
"It follows that a national court requested by a person who has complied with the provisions of a directive not to apply a national provision incompatible with the directive not incorporated into the legal order of a defaulting Member State, must uphold that request if the obligation is unconditional and sufficiently precise."
The court should not apply regulation 77 insofar as it breaches Mr Hockenjos' directly effective rights.
"……..a member of the same household for whom that person is responsible and who is a child or a person of a prescribed description."
"The Court has consistently held that the national court may not apply the provision which is contrary to Community law. Yet the problem in the situation in question is that the frame of reference which the Court of Justice offers the national court in equal treatment cases with regard to remedies for individuals does not provide a solution here. In the event that discrimination is established, the court requires the national court invariably to apply the same rules to the members of the group placed at a disadvantage, be they men or women, as are applied to members of the other group. That approach affords no comfort to the appellants in the main proceedings: even in the case of lone fathers, childminding expenses are not deductible from income for vocational training (supplementary allowance) or from income from work (income support)."
"19 It is apparent from the judgment of 13 December 1989 in case C-102/88 Ruzius Wilbrink v Betsuur van de Bedriifsvereniging voor Overheidsdiensten [1989] ECR 4311, that in a case of indirect discrimination the members of the class of persons placed at a disadvantage are entitled to have the same scheme applied to them as that applied to other workers, on a basis proportional to their working time. That ruling applies equally to discriminatory provisions in a collective agreement.
20. In must therefore be stated in reply to the second question that, where there is indirect discrimination in a clause in a collective wage agreement, the class of persons placed at a disadvantage by reason of that discrimination must treated in the same way and made subject to the same scheme, proportionately to the number of hours worked, as other workers, such scheme remaining, for want of correct transposition of Article 119 of the EEC Treaty into a national law, the only valid point of reference."
Conclusion
1. There has been a breach by the United Kingdom of Article 4 of the Directive. The operation of the rule of entitlement to child additions for income-based JSA discriminates in favour of women and the Secretary of State has been unable to show objective justification for the discrimination.
2. The discrimination bites in the appellant's case not just on regulations 77(1), 77(2) and 77(3)(a) of the JSA Regulations, as concluded by the commissioner, but also on regulation 77(3)(b) and 77(5).
3. Regulation 77 should not have been applied to the appellant in respect of Alisha. As both children met the test in section 35 of the 1995 Act, as persons of his household for whom he was responsible, he was entitled to both supplements to his JSA (payable on a weekly basis) for looking after them. That appears to remain the position with Alisha.
Arden LJ :
i) the child benefit link, to be found in paragraphs (1), (2) and (3)(b) of regulation 75.
ii) single payment/single claimant rule, to be found in paragraph (5) of regulation 75.
Child benefit link
Single payment/single claimant rule
Justification
(i) consultees considered that payment to the parent with primary responsibility was appropriate for the vast majority of parents with children;
(ii) any change would need careful planning;
(iii) there would need to be careful preparation of the ground with claimants and advisers;
(iv) a change would require more resources including expensive information technology changes.
"in the current state of Community law, social policy is a matter for member states ..."
Remedy
"All rents, annuities, dividends, and other periodical payments in the nature of income (whether reserved or made payable under an instrument or otherwise) shall, like interest on money lent, be considered as accruing from day to day and shall be apportionable in respect of time accordingly. "
"The provisions of this Act shall not extend to any case in which it is or shall be expressly stipulated that no apportionment shall take place."